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Date:         Thu, 28 Nov 2002 04:51:40 -0800
Reply-To:     TJ Hannink <tjhannink@YAHOO.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         TJ Hannink <tjhannink@YAHOO.COM>
Subject:      Re: Sunroof/Moonroof/Marine Hatch
Comments: To: Mark Dorm <mark_hb@HOTMAIL.COM>
In-Reply-To:  <F73ee4fDGCl9FopYC98000028f9@hotmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

You probably won't find much sympathy with most listee's this time of year, they're trying to figure out how to keep their vans warm.

The aftermarket sunroof is a bad idea, it will let more heat into the vehicle and will eventually leak, even when it isn't open. With the mid-afternoon monsoons we get here in Florida, the less holes in the roof, the better. An RV skylight might be a better idea, but looks bad.

If you want to try and use the roof vents for ventilation, park into the wind and open them up with the lower lever of the ventilation controls. This helps (slightly) only if the hot air has a venting point.

You could also pick up a set of Side Window Wind & Rain Deflectors from www.eurocampers.com. Then you can keep your front windows rolled down at least 2" without allowing rain inside.

Get a windshield heat deflector and use it.

I use all of the above and open my roof vent 1" on my '87 camper during the hottest part of the year. It does work, interior temperatures decrease by 10F, which takes it from 135F to 125F. That means that its still sweltering, but there is less of a temperature differential for the A/C to overcome, so the interior cools off more quickly.

The only thing that will work to keep interior temperatures close to air temperature is to park in the shade.

Welcome to the south, currently a cool 55F and probably not breaking 70F today, wondering why anyone would want to live in a place that is colder than the inside of their refrigerator.

--- Mark Dorm <mark_hb@HOTMAIL.COM> wrote:

>Is there anyway to have a small sunroof on the ceiling to the side of the ac duct? I've asked an installer and haven't gotten anywhere with it. Need information. What about marine hatches? Can something like this work? If you look at the air vents that are in the sides of the ceiling, you'll see that behind the air vent plastic (air flow adjuster/controler/thing) there is the metal which forms the roof. Okay, so what about a small vent there that allows heat to leave the interior of the vanagon? One that doesn't let the rain in....

===== TJ Hannink Goldibox - 1987 Vanagon Camper, Wolfsburg Edition Winter Park, Florida http://home.earthlink.net/~tjhannink/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/wolfsburg_campers http://photos.yahoo.com/tjhannink [Vanagon] Album

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